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An Intel Core i7-14700 CPU box, along with a cleaned-off version of the Core i5-13500 that was inside, next to a syringe of thermal paste
Product Reviews

I managed to snag a Core i5 CPU for $10, because someone scammed Amazon out of an i7-14700

by admin September 19, 2025



The other day, I stopped into a local Amazon returns store on my lunch break. You probably know the type: chaotically overflowing other people’s returned orders, with half-open boxes scattered about in huge bins. It’s like some kind of post-apocalyptic ball pit game show, where you might find something worthwhile if you wade through enough discarded shelving kits, no-name iPhone cases, and shoe insoles. This particular store is only a few months old, and I’d visited a few times without finding much (other than a pair of insoles, which I needed because I walk 9-10 miles a day).

On this trip, the first day after a weekly restock, when everything in the bins costs $10, I managed to find a roll of Creality 3D printer PLA filament. That’s not a huge discount over its typical Amazon sale price, but I happened to need a new spool for my Anycubic printer, and I was a few blocks from home, so this saved me the hassle of ordering. After a few more minutes pawing through returns, I hadn’t found anything else and went up to pay. But there was a line, and I wound up waiting at the corner of one of the closest bins to the register. Killing time, I idly dug around while I waited, and soon spotted the familiar blue of an Intel CPU box. I flipped it over and saw an i7-14700 sticker!

Could I really have just found the frequency-locked version of Intel’s last-generation flagship for $10? And if so, had someone returned it because of the notorious instability issues? Something else? I could see the CPU in its plastic clamshell through the cardboard window. The back looked OK, but the top was covered in thermal paste.

I was suspicious, but by this time, I was next in line, curious, and decided to gamble $10 on Intel. That’s maybe not the smartest wager I could make in 2025, but I was curious, and figured this would at least be more interesting than wasting money on a scratch-off ticket. I checked out with three items: the filament, the CPU, and another pair of shoe insoles – seriously, I wear those things out and can never have enough.


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After paying my $32.25 after tax, I stepped outside, wishing I had a napkin to immediately wipe the thermal paste off with. Instead, I slacked my coworkers about what I had found, while I marched back to my apartment. When I got home, I immediately opened the CPU box, grabbed a paper towel, and wiped the used thermal paste off the CPU’s IHS, to be met with immediate disappointment. This wasn’t a 14th Gen Core i7 after all!

(Image credit: Future)

But it was a 13th Gen Core i5 – a Core i5 13500, to be specific. Not quite one of the best CPUs, and a generation older than what the box promised, but still a very usable chip, with 14 cores, 20 threads, and a Turbo Frequency of 4.8 GHz. It’s not the fastest chip, but it currently sells for $264 at Newegg – not a bad pickup for $10. If it works, anyway.

So why was a 13th Gen Core i5 returned in a Core i7-14700 box? For those who haven’t already connected the dots, it’s likely that someone scammed Amazon by buying a new, higher-end chip than what they had, put the old one back in the box (helpfully obscured by thermal paste), and returned it for a refund. And Amazon, dealing as it does with millions of packages a day, seemingly accepted the return without checking that the returned product was actually what was returned, eventually selling it as part of a lot of liquidated returns.

I have no way to verify any of this, of course, but it seems the most likely scenario. And it’s certainly unsurprising that Amazon would just accept a return without paying someone to open the box, wipe off the thermal paste, and confirm they had received the Core i7-14700 the customer had ordered. There’s no way Amazon could continue to run its business if it had to do something like that with even half of its returns.

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The only lingering question I had was whether my $10 13th Gen Core i5 CPU actually works. So I grabbed my trusty Hoto screwdriver, removed the AIO waterblock on the system that previously served as our external SSD storage testbed, and removed the 12th Gen Core i5 CPU that previously resided in the LGA 1700 socket. I then dropped my 13th Gen Core i5 into the motherboard, applied five small drops of thermal paste, re-attached the cooler, and plugged the system back in.

(Image credit: Future)

I pressed the power button and stared at the blackness of my test bench monitor for what felt like too many seconds, but eventually I saw the spinning circle and soon the familiar Windows 11 login screen. The old system booted up without an issue, and after running a few benchmarks, it looks like my $10 chip performs as expected.

Now the only question is, what should I do with it? I don’t need another gaming rig – I’m writing this on an AMD Ryzen 7950X / Nvidia RTX 4090 PC I built back in 2023, and I already have a few other systems and CPUs for testing PC cases and accessories. Maybe I’ll build a system for a family member or friend.

All I know is, while it didn’t turn out to be a 14th Gen Core i7 promised on the box, I’m happy with the results of my $10 CPU gamble, and I wonder what I’ll find at the returns store next week. I don’t really need any more PC hardware, but if I could pass up enticing tech that I don’t really need, I probably wouldn’t have gotten into this crazy business in the first place.



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September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Styx: Blades of Greed managed to impress with its stealth gameplay despite my attempts to do the opposite
Game Reviews

Styx: Blades of Greed managed to impress with its stealth gameplay despite my attempts to do the opposite

by admin September 16, 2025


“Just to let you know, I am not very good at these kinds of games.” “Don’t worry, I am sure you will be fine.” “No, really, I am not known for putting the b in subtle… I really struggle with stealth.” “Honestly, you will be fine.”

Plays game for roughly two minutes.

“Hmmm, yes, you do need some help. Why don’t we show you the tutorial.”

Watch on YouTube

I am taking Styx: Blades of Greed out for a quick spin with the developers from Cyanide Studio. For those unfamiliar with the Styx series, they are infiltration games where you play as a caustic goblin by the name of, well, Styx. Blades of Greed is the upcoming third instalment, and the aim of the game is to be super stealthy while gathering Quartz, a powerful and precious substance. There is also a small matter of an impending war between elves, humans and orcs to take into account.

Blades of Greed all kicks off after the events of Styx: Shards of Darkness, though I am assured you don’t need to have played any of the previous entries to still enjoy the upcoming release. And, as you may have surmised already, I sucked at it. Like, I was truly terrible. But by golly did I have an absolute hoot playing it!

As soon as I booted up the game, I was transported to a dark, medieval fantasy world, lit with beacons and a looming sense of trepidation and hostility. I was at The Wall, an utterly brutal military stronghold. A vertical fortress of concrete, steel, and, most importantly for stealth-focused games like this, surveillance, with patrolling guards and aggressive gangs roaming the many levels. Oh yes, this place was full of obstacles-a-plenty, that would not be pleased to find a rogue goblin in their midst. My job was to scale that bad boy in order to convince a morally dubious sky pirate to join me, and allow me use of his zeppelin. How hard could it be?

Well, it turns out, really hard! So, I (along with the very patient developers who’d had to witness me falling off more than one ledge, casually setting myself on fire as I tried to hide behind a brazier, and getting stabbed in the gut after I decided to walk out into the open with some very misplaced confidence in my own abilities) made the brave decision to turn back from The Wall, and instead head to the mines, where I could learn the Blades of Greed ropes.

Right, I’ll just silently drop in here, no one will suspect a thing! | Image credit: Nacon

Here, I soon learned about staying in the dark, peering through doors, stepping on carpets to soften the sound of my footsteps, throwing sand to extinguish torches from afar, sliding so I could position myself to get that perfect, silent assassination in, and generally using the environment to my advantage. I became a shadow, at one with the night… until I crashed into a table and immediately alerted several guards to my presence. I then learned how to panic and swipe erratically with my blade. It got messy. I was very grateful for the quick save feature.

I was also very grateful for the many tricks Styx had tucked up his green sleeves. The Blades of Greed goblin will eventually get access to a number of powerful abilities, including mind control. Thanks to a little bit of behind the scenes magic from a developer sympathetic to my cause (shh, don’t tell), I was able to use this ability early, and got a guard to attack his fellow comrades on my behalf. Another power I was able to use during my preview turned Styx invisible. I made the most of this after I finally made it into a tavern within The Wall, and pulled a lever to cause a large, candle-adorned chandelier to crash down on the patrons’ heads without them ever seeing me. Trust me, they had it coming, and it was all very satisfying.

The other ability I got to briefly try out was Clone, which created an illusionary double of Styx that I could control. I got this little chap to bop off another guard and, again, it was very satisfying to watch all of this going down from my safe spot, which was me crouching and staying well hidden behind a large crate. Wait, was I starting to get the hang of this stealth thing?

Who am I kidding, no I absolutely was not, and soon I was once more fleeing from many angry pursuers looking to have my guts for garters. It was exhilarating.

More glider in action, definitely not something I’d use to escape with after making a pig’s ear of the stealth. | Image credit: Nacon

After my time at The Wall, I visited Blades of Greed’s Turquoise Dawn. Unlike The Wall, this area was lush, full of greenery and life. It was still suuuuper hostile, though! Here, I was able to try out some of Styx’s equipment, including his grapple hook, which I used to make a speedy exit after for some reason thinking it was a good idea to pop out from an underground tunnel-like system right at the feet of a very heavily armed guard. Whoops!

I also got to try Styx’s glider, a new piece of kit for the series. I again deployed this to heroically flee, though this time from a rampant onslaught of advancing and absolutely massive (ok, they weren’t actually that big) bug-like creatures. Honestly, everything in this game wanted to kill me. And for the most part, everything was being quite successful. So, I ran like the wind as the army of many legs thundered behind me, took a bold leap off a verdant cliff edge and drifted my way down to safety… Before I turned right back around again, and started another ascent back towards that Quartz I so desperately wanted, but now with a different route in mind. Reader, I was hooked.

We don’t yet have a release date for Styx: Blades of Greed, though the developer has said it will be out this year. And when that time comes, let it be known I will absolutely be jumping (as quietly as possible, of course) back into the chaos and fray.

Things can only go well… right?!

This article is based on a trip to gamescom 2025. Nacon provided travel and accommodation.



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September 16, 2025 0 comments
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